john powell 4/1/21 speeches, 3 files 4/1/21 1989
TRANSCRIPT
The Speeches of JohnEnoch Powell
POLL 4/1/21Speeches, January-November 1989, 3
files
POLL 4/1/21 File 3, January-April 1989
Image The Literary Executors of the late Rt. Hon. J Enoch Powell& content the copyright owner. 2011.
13/1/1989 Defence and Foreign Policy “Old Bill Would Do It Again” Old Bill Symposium, Warwick Jan-April 1989 Page 47
18/2/1989 Defence and Foreign Policy An Expanding Army Royal Regiment of Fusiliers Assoc., Sheldon T.A. Centre Jan-April 1989 Page 39
20/2/1989 Northern Ireland Anglo-Irish Agreement Central Committee South Down Unionist Assoc., Dromore, Co. Down Jan-April 1989 Page 43
22/2/1989 Law and Order Interference With Free Exit Cambridge University Cons. Assoc. Jan-April 1989 Page 34
26/2/1989 Immigration and Social Cohesion Sex “Equality" Rugby School Chapel Jan-April 1989 Page 28
2/3/1989 Energy And Environment E.E.C. And Farming Hereford N.F.U. Dinner, Hereford Jan-April 1989 Page 23
15/4/1989 The European Union E.E.C.: The Impending Change Public Meeting, British Anti-Common Market Campaign, London Jan-April 1989 Page 17
22/4/1989 The European Union “Be Yourself Britannia” (E.E.C.) Public Meeting, Yorkshire Monday Club, Winter Gardens, Ilkley Jan-April 1989 Page 10
23/4/1989 Religion and Faith St George’s Day: The Temple Sermon, Ilkley Jan-April 1989 Page 6
27/4/1989 Northern Ireland Ulster: Equal Treatment Mourne Young Unionists, Kilkeel Jan-April 1989 Page 3
NOT FOR PUBLICATION OR BEFERLNCETO CONTENT BEFORE TIRE OF DELIVERY
Speech by the Et Hon. J. Enoch Powell, P,BE, to tneMourne Young Unionists, Kilkeel, Co. Down, at 8 p.m.,
Thursday, 27th April, 1989.
I surely can't be the only person who is sick and tired, after
every successive outrage committed against Ulster's people by the
IRA, at seeing press and television shots of Tom Ring and a gaggle
of Irish Republic ministers laughing their heads off as they for-
gather under the umbrellas for their regular Conference under the
Anglo-Irish Agreement. I will be generous enough to suppose that
he and they are not actually laughing at the atrocities. I only say
they might be, because the whole thing has become the longest-
411running farce in Europe.
Here are apparently rational grown men allegedly engaged in
trying to curb the murderous activities of the IRA while all the
time sending to the IRA a hearty message of encouragement to "carry
on, you're doing fine, we're engaged in paving the way for you to
the accomplishment of your objective". The Secretary of State is not
so stupid, and the Prime Minister, who has him on her leash, is not
so stupid either, as not to know that the Anglo-Irish Agreement is
seen by those who matter as a deliberate step knowingly taken in
the direction of incorporating Ulster into an all-Ireland state.
What else do the Americans think it is all about? What else do the
politicians of the Irish Republic think it is about? What else do
the SDLP and other, more honest republicans in Northern Ireland
think it is about? I don't expect the IRA to lay floral tributes
at the feet of 't,rs Thatcher and Mr Haughey - they prefer displaying
placards which denounce him as "traitor" or "murderer" - but what
else does the IRA think the Anelo-Irish Agreement is about?
The cynical streak in all this tragi-comedy is that every one
of the parties concerned knows there isn't the faintest chance of
taking the people of Ulster voluntarily down that road. I ought
perhaps to make an exception for the Northern Ireland Office, which
• - -
still apparently believes pathetically that it can find a way to
bribe or bully the Ulster people into selling their birthright.
Otherwise everybody - Thatcher, Haughey, even the British Foreign
Office - know perfectly well that the last General Election returned
a true bill of sixteen seats to one in favour of being governed by
the Parliament of the Union. They know another thing too. They
know that Haughey and the Irish Republic would run as fast as their
legs could carry them over the horizon if they ever thought that
there was a real risk of Ulster being handed to them on a plate.
So the bloodshed is the most criminal, miserable and guilty_
of all bloodshed. It is bloodshed on the road to nowhere.
There has been little enough lately to amuse us unionists;
but one thing has given us some light relief. The Conservative
Party, including our Conservative paladin, Mr Ian Gow, are all
cock-a-hoop over the idea of forming Conservative Associations in
Ulster and putting up Conservative candidates, explaining as they do
so that they think the Ulster electorate ought to be treated as an
integral part of the electorate and the political life of the rest
of the United Kingdom.
Very well then, and what does a Conservative Party candidate
standing in Ulster say in answer to question No. 1: ''Are you for
or against the Anglo-Irish Agreement:" if he says 'No° , then what
is ne doing standing here as a candidate of the party which made the
111 Agreement, supported it and apparently still supports it? If he
saya "Yes", well, I wouldn't like to be in his shoes, though his
vote will not give the counting clerks much -work to do. If the
Conservative Party wants to get back the support from Ulster which
Ted Heath tore up and threw away, you and I can tell them what to
co with the Anglo-Irish Agreement double quick.
Still, if there is the faintest flicker of dawning common sense
among the Government's supporters, it would be churlish not to
acknowledge it and do one's best to blow the flicker into a flame.
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Ulster, they are saying, ought to be treated exactly like the
rest of the United Kingdom. Bravo, quite right, say we you have
stumbled on a great truth, on the weapon for defeating the IRA , on
the solution to what you persist in calling "the problem of
Northern Ireland". But the claim of Northern Ireland to be treated
exactly the same as any other part of the United Kingdom goes much
farhter than the trivial business of party political organisation.
It is a fundamental right. If the Conservative Party is in fact
beginning now to understand that at last, it is echoing a note which
I hear sounding ever more insistently on the mainland. 'ojhat can not. —
go on much longer in blank opposition to elementary justice and
111 British fair play is the ill-fated attempt persisted in so long
at-the cost of so much human suffering, to lever Nortnern Ireland
out of the United Kingdom while all the while proclaiming that it
remains a part of it.
44 ° 4-;k4444 &-.1,6 n44-74:2, 14.0--oe2 /' _ 42-4-(.0tekpp /1,:t /zrzet/i,
'r-f/tm-(11V/11-4 4(44-1-39evie /-44,61 1_, LgaAddress on St George's Day Morning Servicq, Ilkley, Yorks
23rd A ril 1989
rea,pt4,e4t. 21y,o4y:a .Most people are familiar with the incident in which Jesus, after
his entry into Jerusalem, went into the Temple and proceeded to upset
the tables of the moneychangers and the seats - or was it perhaps
the cages? - of the men who sold doves, Only one in ten perhaps
of those who recall the incident Could quote the verse of Isaiah with
which Jesus accompanied his action: "My house shall be called 4ki
house of prayer". Certainly not more than one in a thousand knows
that that was not the end of the sentence in Isaiah. The full sen-
tence in Isaiah runs: "My house shall be called -house of prayer
for all the entiles".
Those last four words, "for all the gentiles", are so electrify-
ing that Jesus could surely not have omitted them. If somebody else
did so, they could not have done it by accident but just because the
words are so electrifying that the message conveyed by Jesus quoting
Isaiah was impossible to misunderstand.
To prevent the Jew from changing his money into the only
currency in which the Temple dues were accepted, to prevent him from
obtaining the birds prescribed by law for his sacrificial duty, was
to put an end to all possibility of his worshipping in the Temple at
all. Whether Jesus performed action physically - as artists all
down the centuries have depicted him doing - or whether he did it
symbolically, or whether he only prophesied that such a day would
come to pass, the reason which he gave for it is arresting. It was,
he said, because the Temple was to be place of prayer not for Jews
only but "for all the gentiles". A more startling juxtaposition of
action and words could not have been contrived.
What we do know for certain is that the Temple was in fact
destroyed not long afterwards - by the Roman general and future
emperor Titus in 70 AD. It was an event from which the Jewish nation
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never recovered and with which the Jews, except in so far as they
became Christians, were never able to come to terms. From that
moment onwards they could no longer worship as the Law had commanded
them to worship - in the Temple. The meaning had been knocked out
of their world, leaving only room for lamentation over the ruined
walls. To be told by Jesus not only that all this would happen
but that it would happen in order in God's purposes to make the
Temple a "house of prayer" for the whole gentile world - that was
too much to be borne, too much to be understood, too much to be
accepted.
And yet - and yet - that prophecy of Jesus was also to be
fulfilled. In a different Jerusalem and a different temple the
promises and the covenant with God wnich had been the distinctive
national possession of Israel were to become the common inheritance
of all mankind.
I have brought before you Matthew 21.13 and Isaiah 56.7 on
that day of all the days in the year on which it is permitted to
the English, whose banner flies from the flagstaff of this church's
tower to celebrate, and to celebrate in God's house, their own
nation, its laws and its life, its history and its achievement.
The generation which in 1939 was called upon to defend by armed force
. the continued existence of that nation is now dying out; but I do
not doubt that its existence, whether threatened militarily or
politically will be defended as resolutely and instinctively by
those who will come after.
To do so is in no way incompatible with submission to the
divine purpose, but upon one condition, Ihe m'otto of the royal arms
of the United Kingdom, Dieu et mon droit, "God and my right", is
neither a blasphemy nor a presumption. It is not what the Greeks
used to call hubris. It is a statement of our belief. That one
condition to which I referred is that we never forget the mortality
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and transience of that possession which has proved so enduring andeVer
whose existence we are unwilling to contemplate beingibrought to an
end. While the greatest naval force in the world dispersed after
Queen Victoria's Jubilee review at: Spithead, the uncrowned poet
laureate of that British Empire which today exists no more called
upon his fellow countrymen not to forget. Not to forget what?
Not to forget the mortality and transience of even that unprecedent-
edly mighty world power.
The theme)and the resonance of the music to which it was set
echoed through many decades.—through the decades of the First World
War, through the decades of turmoil which followed)and through
the years of renewed peril before 1939. Today,in an England whose
sons no longer rule India nor hold the balance of power in the
remotest parts of the earth, we might think the admonition untimely
or irrelevant. We would be mistaken.
It was, physically speaking, a speck of a nation which fought
to the death to defend the Temple mount at Jerusalem against the
legions and whose prophets were so proud that they predicted a day
when the whole world would submit to their God. They proved wrong;
and they also proved right. What they had been and done, the belief
and the nationhood which they had defended down the centuries,
including even their years in compulsory banishment, became part
of the common inheritance of mankind. That thing could not have
come to pass unless they had defended with such courage and perti-
nacity their peculiar national possession.
What they thus defended and preserved was unique and was their
own Sa the inheritance of England, which we preserve and defend,
is our own and is unique. The duty and the instinct to defend and
to preserve it ab-e not refuted by the fact that,in circumstances
and through channels which it is not given to us to know or to
imagine, it will in the course of future time become part of the
common patrimony of mankind. This also is immortality. Athens,
..• -4-
glorious Athens, which thought, fought and then disappeared fromthe world stage centuries before Jesus came, is alive and potenttoday in the life of men. The Temple which Jesus foretold wouldbe destroyed was rebuilt, as he also foretold, but in a fashioninconceivably wonderful and inconceivably (in human terms)
OW'improbable. Our affection for England and/loyalty to it, ourfears for it and our endeavours for its preservation, these belongto the order of those things that cannot perish. "It is written",said Jesus, "my house shall be called the house of prayer for allthe nations".
41/IJI)T FOR PUBLICATIOP OR REFERENCETO CONTENT.BEFORE TimE OF DELIVERY
Speech by the Et Hon. J. Enoch Powell, VEE to aPublic Meeting organised by Yorkshire monday Clubat the Kinw's Hall, Winter Gardens, Ilkley, Yorks
at 2 p m Saturday, 22nd April 1989.
As the anniversary approaches of the General Election of 1979,
the public has been deluged with a spate of ten-year appraisals,
many of them centring upon the personality of the Prime Minister.
It is not my purpose this afternoon to offer yet another contribution
in that mode, subject only to one introductory observation. I dis-
cern no symptoms on the part of the present Government that it is not
looking ahead to the next General Election and the Parliament which
411will then be elected with any less relish than the Conservative Partydid in 1979 or 1983. This is a decidedly new phenomenon. However
for-ward-looking the titles which they adopted for their election
manifestos, this is not the mood displayed by any government which
I can recall in 1950 or, for that matter, in 1970. Moreover many ofhand,
the subjects which government has taken in in 1989 are self-
evidently of such a kind that preoccupation with them will last the
remainder of this century. This is what makes neither academic nor
fanciful the task I have accepted this afternoon - to talk about the
next ten years in the context of the Party to which I have not be-_
longs.ed since 1974 but which has sustained for a decade now the
. S government of this country.
That personal note which I was obliged to sound is the cue for
my first item. There are some miseries which of their nature can not
go on forever. For too long - since at least 1972, to go no further
back into history - the government of the United Kingdom has treated
a part of the United Kingdom, namely Ulster, in a manner which sig-nals
to all concerned its intention to find a way, painless if
possible but painful if necessary, of moving that province out of
the United Kingdom into some form of all-Ireland state. Without
the encouragement which that prospect has provided, the IRA would
-2-
never have revived from the torpor in which it was sunken seven-
teen years ago, nor would terrorism have risen since the signing in
1985 of the Anglo-Irish Agreement to its present appalling level.
Some day Britain will have to stop feeding the tiger with the
living flesh of our own people and start to give to the people of
Northern Ireland, who continue to vote ,to belong to the UnitedL:=9-te.
Kingdom by a majority of sixteenLto one, the same status and treatmeh•
as is accorded to their fellow citizens in the remaining 83-=, con-
stituencies. The Conservative Party has lately shown great interest
in the possibility of promoting Conservative candidates in Northern
Ireland. I cannot promise you that any of them will be elected,
and I can show you a quicker way to increase support for the Govern-
ment in the House of Commons. Nevertheless, the move is a sign of a
growing insistence among Conservatives that there must be equality
of treatment for Nortnern Ireland within the United Kingdom and equal
acceptance of its permanent constitutional posit.ion there. So it is
a pointer in the right direction, a pointer towards the only policy
for Ulster that can end the bloodshed and destruction and put our
relations with the Irish Republic back again on to a stable and honest
footing. That is a consummation that has got to come somehow and
sometime. Nobody, neither tne Government nor the Ulster people nor
Britain as a whole, stand to gain from delay. The siEnals so long
set at danger can be swiftly and simply altered. The process of
111 treating Northern Ireland in Parliament like any other part of the
country is treated could begin next week, if the willingness existed
to break with past mistakes and dishonour. May it come soon.
Nothing in politics ever stands quite still, however little may
appear on the surface to be changing. Lone periods elapse when
governments pretend not to know and when the public at large seems
content to accept the pretence. Then suddenly the scene alters. For
twenty years I have pleaded for the facts about the future population
of this country, area by area, to be shared by Government with the
-3-
pc:opie. The facts have been known in the Departments cf Education,
of Health, of the Environment. They were known, but they were ob-
stinately concealed. They are facts more reliably established than
the prospective hole in the ozone layer or the melting of the polar
ice or the nuclear pollution of the environment. What has now
changed is that a wider public has arrived at a new awareness and
has acquired a new interest in a future which it ierceives to be11'4' 1 t-t„ <1(;', /Y
its futurealso. The tim0 is coming when Governmtnt can no loni:;er
hold the cards to its chest. When it puts them on the table, a new
debate will commence which has not been feasible hitherto, a debate
between Government and public. When that happens, it :ill be for the
411 public to decide whether they accept the consequences of what was
allowed to happ n without their full knowledge That is a debate' & rt.-1 L
which is firmly on the agenda sheet of the next ten yea/s; Niz
e olorp.or t unit y-wh-i dh-th-e B i sp ople will
" ven o reje -fro.t'ffr-ToVtn-consented,tjth
The year 1992 has acquired a symbolical s3L,niff_cance.It is the
symbol of a gradecision which Britain has to take but one onnow
which the Government itself hasiven the lead and of which it has
defined the terms. The year 1992 is that in which full freedom of
trade is to be established between the citizens of this country
and those of the other states of the European Economic Community.
That freedom we will not hinder, and as a nation we have committee
outseives not to hinder it. There is a mood abroad in Britain whichat -
scorns timidity and the attitudes of inferiority complex .1-n the
A-7112411'of free competition with our neighbours across the Channel.
Acceptance, not refusal,of international economic competition
has become in the last ten years a part of this country s ethos,
and it matches the freedom to trade and to compete in West,:rn Europe
which will be enlarged in 1992.
That Saz&Ay is no longer the great s 1;ionwhich the
Government and people of this country will be called upon to decide.
•Freedom for individuals and companies to trade and to compete 4.5 a
principle which cannot be geographically circumscribed. The counter-
part of the European single market internally has hitherto been the
prevention and distortion of trade and competition with the rest of
the world. There is an infinity of difference between a single
market and a customs union: a customs union is the denial and repud-t-
ation of freedom of trade with anybody We( anywhere outside that
union. A customs union is also the embryo of political domination:
it was so in the 19th century, when the German Zellverein paved the
road to the amalEamation of the states of Germany into tne Prussian
Re-i-ch of- the Hohenzollerns and cf Hitler, a44Ki )Lt threatens to become
.
so again, if those who intend to turn the European Community into a
centralised superstate are allowed to get their way.
In both these causes the leadership belongs to Britain. It is
to Britian that worldwide trade across the oceans is congenial and
because cf the nature of our economy and geography supremely bene-
ficial. An inward-locking, protective system in Europe is no part
of Britain's vision of the world. The original community of the Six
may have been built upon that idea. Britain cannot be content with
a European single market that insists on being isolated and insulated.
Still less car Britain accept the fallacy that a sinpie market
-- omwst meant-a—airric-o-Termne-n , a-single lepTislatilro a-nd
system of laws, taxation and economic management. Oldest by far of
411the parliamentary democracies in the European Community, we echo the
words of the Prime Vinister at Bruges that "co-operation between
in*Wdependent sovereign states is the best way to build a success-
ful European community , and we reject, as she rejected, the attempt
to 'suppress nationhood and concentrate power at the centre of a
European conglomerate'.
This is Britain's supreme business in the next ten years: to
restore for ourselves, and by doing so to restore for other; a Europe
of self-governing, independent and distinctive nations, whose citizens
are free nonetheless to exchange with one another their go ds and
services, their thoughts and their discoveries, trcir advances and
their insiEhts. 14-1/This great re--n-t4;x4...i,e of Britain in tie 199Gcs belongs to that
C e,enhanced status whichythe reant unforeseen transformation in the
I/-political face of the European continent - y.
In thkEurope of e-emorgent nations, which the East-West rigidities
of the "Iron Curtain" can no longer contain, Britain has ceased to
be a subordinate satellite of the United States and has visibly, to
the rest of the world if not to ourselves, become the cominant factor
in remaking the map of Europe and recreating the balance of powerMC-41)14
. 4nectSsary to its peace and security. We have prated for too long
about something called "leadership in Europe". Pell, it has come to
us, and not at the price of repudiatingcrLyn nationhood. The
tragedy now will be if we fail to rise to t through blindness or kL-
entanglement in past/perceptions.
The call is to return to our own destiny. It does not depend
on speculation about the future of Mr Gorbachev or about internal
developments in the Soviet Union, which we cannot foresee and which
are anyhow no business of ours. Thc great factors cf nationhood and
of geography do not dance attendance on the whims or fates of indivi6
duals. Events have exposed the untenability of previous assumptions
about the nuclear deterrent and the aggressive intentions of Soviet
Russia towards Western Europe. The nuclear deterrent was always
bankrupt of reality. The hypothesis of a Russian will to conquer
Western Europe was a]ways an absurd hypothesis. What has happened
is that governments, East and West, are being cblid to admit the
falsity of the propositions upon which their wores and policies have
hitherto been based. I do not underestimate the demands which this
turnaround makes upon the insight and integrity of Her Majesty's
Government: I point out only how severely that insight End integrity
is going to be tEsted in the coming years.
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There is a direct, if ironic, link between these historic
devaopments on the European continent and the readjustments of
British policy fcr which they call, and on the
other hand the internal economic and fiancial policies of the
United Kingdom. It was by the consistent and courageous application
cf a correct economic analysis that this Cons r,ative Governemnt in
its first eight years got the upper hand over tlic phenomenon of on-
going high inflation which had dogged and defeated its predecessors.
No candid or knowledgeable commentator had ever denied in advance
that to end the expectation of persistent inflation would entail
severe economic readjustment, or that that readjustment would
0 necessarily involve a painful though terminable period of high
unemployment. It was equal y predictable that, as the readjustmenbt
worked its way through the system, the level of unemployment would
fall again.
The Government was rewarded for its constancy and determination
by seeing inflation come down, not indeed to its proper level (which
is zero) but to a rate which gave people a mounting sense of stability
which many had never experienced before. The Government was rewarded
also by seeing economic activity and employment moVE: back again to
more normal levels. At this very juncture the Government and the
country have been shocked by a sharp recurrenco of inflation, a--—
recurrence which appeared not only to threaten what had been so
expensively achieved but, more seriously still, to call in Question
the correctness and validity of economic and monetary policy itself
since 1979. The experience has been as bewildering and distressing
as a snowstorm in June. if stability and confidence arc to be
recoiered, it is important to understand what went wroniz and why.
I am conscious of having inflicted a heavy lecture about
exchange rates upon a much-enduring audience in this Hall not long
ago. I promise not to inflict another new; but this is the point
where internal and external politics, economic and nat-lonal policies,
-7-
converge arc intersect. Fortunately the true explanation of what we
wrung is beginning more and more tc emerge in public - net, I
may say, to the credit of the Treasury or the Bank of England but mucr
I would hope, to the encouragement of a government and nation minded
to reassert themselves in the face of Europe and the wuri
hasThe rest of the world/reacted to Britain's new-found monetary
stability and economic efficiency by investing in this country on a
massive scale. Nothing wrong about that. In fact, everything ri ht
about that. In order, however, to do so, the would-be investors
needed to get hold of sterling. What went wrung was that we manufac-
_tured lots more sterling for them instead of letting interest r
ates
and the exchange rate rise, as they would otherwise have done. That
of course was synonymous with creating inflation again. So why, oh
why, did we du this? For one reason, we did it to oblige the United
States, which has been indulging in ruinously profligate budgeting
and wanted to avoid thu consequences. t''ore important, hwct:vcr, we
did it because the Eurocrats, at home and abroad, want Britain tc sub
ency
-
currmit to a common European / and state bank, which means surrender-
ing national control of our own economic affairs; for it wculd never
do, according to these people, for Britain, the British economy, and
the pound sterling to follow their own course anC work out their ewn
destiny in the markets of the world. So we risked wrecking our^
_achievement by inflating in order to keep sterli , in line with
other
currencies fori
the sake of those/whose ambition s to control and govern us.
The moral of it all is the moral for the next ten years. If it isn't
"rule Britannia , it is "be yourself Britannia. Govern yourself, Britain. Don't
ict others do it for you. Be the power that you arc, in the new Europe of the
nations. Don t play the game of those who live 3000 miles away. Be the trading,
consuming, producing nation that you always were, in that unique island home
which is also your ocean home. The next ten years will show what sent of natier
you are minded to be. The next ten years will show if ydu are minded to be a
nation at all. I think I know your answer,411the world will know it befcre the
year 2000 comes".
i•AJT POR PUELIUiTiOe CiiTu COrTEleT 13EFuHE TImE OF oteIvLii/
Speecn by tne tit Hon. J. Enocn Poeell, mi3L, tw) a
Public 1-ieetind orLanised by tne Britisn erti-Common market Campaidn at Trevelyae Ha11,12 Caxton Street, London, S.W."4, at p.e.,
Saturday, 15th April 109.
•
If I had come before you as little as e year, rot to mention
two years, ado and had described to you the prospects for the
European Economic Community and britain':, u.embership of it as they
now present themselves to everybody, you would have accused me of
treating you to the product of an over-excited imagination. Indul-
gently and kindly, no doubt, you would have thouEht and said, "Here
-2_ __
is a man who sacrificed everything that a politician can sacrifice
in order to denounce and oppose the surrender of his country's
independence to a new centralised superstate. Why eonder, if he
likes to console himself with visi.,nary hopes, whistling to keep up
his spirits and ours as well?"
Within so short a time has the picture of Britain, Europe and
the EEC been transformed. The British prime minister, not in a
slip of the tongue or an impromptu television interview but in
sentences carefully prepared and promulgated, cleared with Cabinet
colleagues and departmental officials, has announced herself
opposed to the transfer of powers from our national parliament to
the institutions of the EEC. "'we have not", she has declared,
410 "successfully rolled back the frontiers of the state in Britain,
only to see them re-imposed at a European level, with a European
superstate exercising a new dominance from Brussels". On the con-
trary, she announced, "eiy first guideline is this willing and
ac4.ive co-operation between independent sovereign states is the best
away to build/successful European Community° . "Independent sovereign
states", indeed! For how many years have we ead to submit to being
told that "independent sovereign statese belong to the past,
beneficently superseded by a European Economic Community in which
esovereignty has been pooled"! ,4hy the very expression "indepeneent
-2-
povereign state" hmo boon a jibe uf ridiculc, elurled contemptuously
at "littlt Englanders".
Now, in the last few weeks we have even been treated to the
spectacle, thanks to Mr Salman Rushdie,of Sir Geoffrey Howe, no less,
referring officially as Foreign Secretary to something called
"British soil". Nor are Britain and Britain's prime minister unique
and isolzted in this transvestite enthusiasm.
It :.as become a commonplace of foreign politics that West
Germany, for whom membership of the European e, mmunity has served
as a de,ontamination chamber after Nazism and military disaster,
is begi ming to perceive the EEC as expendable if it can secure
thereb the greater prize of re-unification - an event now openly
discus,able in chanceries as far apart as Noscow and Dublin. A
whole generation has been born and has grown to manhood, not to
say m Adle age, since the end of the War and the creation of NATO
and s:nce the enthusiasms and idealistic dreamscf those who drew up
the 'reaty of Rome. A new Europe is emerging before our eyes, a
Euro)e or nations - dare I borrow Mrs Thatcher's words and say
"ind:pendent sovereigrr nations: - of which the geography is no
longer dominated by the East-West divide and which no longer sub-
scribes to the American apocalyptic doctrine of mutual nuclear
destruction. The old certainties, i..he old solemnities, the old
axioms about economic unity leading to polftical and military unity,
are falling out of date and ceasing to be comprehensible.
Those of us who have never abandoned the sovereign independence
of cur own country, nor found sufficient cause to wish to barter it
away, flay well enquire how so sudden and so profound a transforma-
tion could come about just at the time when those who have made a
profession out of betraying their country and gained honour and
dignities thereby were relaxing into the self-satisfied smugness
of assured possession.intr-
After a dutiful acknowledgement to the /- poesition of an all-
wise and benevolent Providence, which has not rarely in the past
come to Britain's rescue in the nick of time, our thanks must gc
in the first place to the Labour Party. Who would have imagined
that at the very juncture when their opposition to British sub-
mergence in the EEC was at last acquiring the force and practica-
bility of an idea whose time has come, they would choose that
moment to throw it overboard and present rirs Thatcher for her next
Boadicean triumph over them with an electoral asset which she can-
didly acknowledged when she described "all the rest" in Britain
except out-and-out federalists as 'cheering like mad" after what
she said at Bruges. The Labour Party may not have written that
speech for her; at least they laid down the red carpet at the
hall. So when the Conservative Party is having to brace itself to
swallow the disagreeable medicine of its own past declarations,
what sweeter 'spoonful of sugar" could th-re be for them than to
find that their political opponents have switched on to the opposite
tack?
After the Labour Party, however, our thanks are due, and not
for the first time in our rough island story, to the people of
Russia. It never did make any sort of sense to suppose that the
Soviet Union, whom the Afghan mujahidin sent packing back over their
own back doorstep, are paised to launch a Third World War by attemp-
ting tne conquest of Western Europe or arc only prevented from. -
doing so by the wild improbability that the United States would
410 celebrate that event by committing suicide itself, There is
nothing new about all that. What is new is Soviet Russia's prac-
tical demonstration by deeds, not words, that it no longer contem-
plates maintaining the alignment between itself and the Warsaw Pact
countries of Eastern Europe by military intervention, it was not
accidental that in her speech at Bruges the Prime Ninister made a
pointed reference to those "great European cities'i (her expressioC,
Warsaw, Prague and Budapest. Europe in which the nations of
Eastern Europe enjoy practical external independence, and in which
the balance is no longer that of nuclear terror, is a Europe where
-4-
America's propsurQ for political unification among its allies
cannot help but be relaxed. It was this pressure, steadily and
ruthlessly applied, which has compelled successive British
governments to profess allegiance to an EEC that would be a
political as well as an economic entity. The heat is off. The
British Foreign Office is changing its perspective. A European
balance, which Britain and Russia will have equal interest in
recognizing and maintaining, has superseded the NATO theology of
American domination and indispensability. do amount, of repetition
of outdated formulae in Washington and London can any long..er con-- --
deal their recognition of the new r-ality.
In this springtime of cur hopes, an irresistible impulse to
be up and doing is liable to take possession of those whc all along
kept faith alive that Britain's surrender of its national indepen-
dence was no more than a temporary aberration, a passing and un-
characteristic phase which would one day come to an end. We are
bound to be asking ourselves what we can new do to help on the
reaction that has already started.
Our most danEerous temptation at this moment is to indulge
ourselves in cynical recrimination. We remember, all too well,
the false dawns of the past. We remember the shameless surrender
of its election promises by the government of Iarold Wilson in
1974. We remember how the Iron Lady herself - had we not always
thought that she was "one of us"? - rode off in shininc. armour
to do battle against the EEC in her early days in office, only
to be led gently off the field by a still unreconstructed Cabinet.
We remember also as recently as 1986 how this pr sent government
forced through Parliament a measure that deprived the British people
of the veto over duropean legislation they had always been promised.
All this we remember. If we remembered it with bitterness and
cynicism that would be fully understandable - fully understandable,
but utterly stupid.
• -5-
Our business now is not with recrimination or the cheap
triumph of convicting of inconsistency those whom we should be
supporting and encouraging in their new-found resolution to recover
our bartered rights. Our interest is to make it easy - and to make
it rewarding - for them. If the present government have resolved
to make a stand at last against the ingestion of Britain into a
centralised European superstate, they are unlikely to have done so
imagining it to be a vote-loser. The federalists, said the Prime
Minister (you remember) after her speech at Bruges, "don't like it,
but all the rest are cheering like mad". "All the r st", as you--
and I well know, includes the overwhelming majority of the British (Li
electorate. It behoves us then to cheer and Ice p cheering and to
show all whom it may concern where opinion in the United Kingdom
stands. Let there be no misunderstanding about that on the other
side of the Channel - and no pusillanimous backsliding either on
this side of the Channel by disloyal colleagues or officials. The
marching orders have been given. It remains to fall in behind the
colours.
Nor need we be afraid of 1992. If fair and freo competition
is what 1992 means, wu are ready and willing to make the most of it.
What we will not accept, and what Her Majsty's Government has
repudiated, is the dishonest attempt, under the pretext of increas- e
ing people's freedom to trade and to compete, to subject us to laws
on all manner of other subjects from bathing beaches to social
security, which have not been made by our own Parliament or approved
by our own electorate. To trade with the other fellow and to com-
pete with him fairly, you do not need to govern him. Let the otherdo
nations make their own laws, as we 4:ose their own taxes,
ane go their own ways. ke do not ask for them to be subordinated
or amalgamated into a new superstate under the pretext of a single
market, a market, that is, in which governments arc agre.ed to
impose no restrictions on the frLkom of the citizens of one country
• -6-
to exchange their goods and services with the citizens of the
other countries. On the other hand we will not stand passively
by while a. customs union is constrained, ;.„s Prussia once constraineC
thu German Zo112111, to form the basis of a new and overweening
empire.
We have not given our wcrd idly or in ill faith. We gave
our word to a single market, a market in '_!lhich there should be
no artifical barriers cr obstacles to trade. That is not a Europe
"without frontiers". Naticrs havo frontiers; and a Europe, Mrs
Thatcher's Europe, of "independent sovereign nations will be a
Europe of frontiers, across which men and women are free, while
obeying and making the laws cf their rspective nations, to exchang( -7
with one another their goods and services, their thoughts and their
discoveries. The people of this country bave not h.00n asked or
given their consent to a Europe of common government, central
government, central administration. Had we :antecthat, we would
not have troubled in our long past to proserve our laws, our
liberties and our Parliament. Now, as before, we will fellow
those who call upon us tc defend them.
NOT FOR PUBLICATION OR REFERENCLTO CONTENT BEFORE TINE OF DELIVERY
Address by the Rt Hon. J. Enoch Powell,to the National Farmers Union County Dinner atthe t,'A)at House Hotel, hereford, at 8.15 p.m.,
Thursday, 2nd i'iarch 1989.
You are near enovz,h in Herefordshire to Wales for many of youc..274eay54411
to have watchedeast week the BBC television play Heartland, where
Anthony Hopkins played the part of a Welsh farmer destroyed by the
E.E.C. It was not only excellent drama but a political portent.
Not very iong ago such a programme transmitted by the BBC throughout
the country would have been unthinkable; but the wind has changed,
, and even Broadcasting House is provided with a weathercock.
Some of us towards whose direction the wind is changing now
have not been wholly at peace with the NFU since the beginning of
the last decade, and we welcome the prospect that an ugly rift,
which was never any Eood for anybody, may slowly be on its way to
be mended. In the early 1970's the NFU, followed tthough not perhaps
with total entnusiasm) by the other Farmers Unions in the United
Kingdom, was strong and vocal, in the name of its members, in favour
of Britain signing the treaty of Brussels and becoming part of the
EC. In fact, subseciuently distinguished officers of this
Union have filled high and prestigious positions in the structure
by which Britain is governed from Brussels and Strasbourg.
Those of us who opposed the decision taken in 1972 and have
remained unreconciled to it ever since condemned it as incompatible
with the national independence and self-government of our country.
It was bound to appear to us as if cur fellow citizens in the farming
industry were anxious to do a deal. "All right",they seeffR-2dto be
saying,"the EEC spells financial benefit for us. If the counterpart
is that Britain must give up the right to make its own laws and set
its own taxes, O.K. by us". The dictionaries contain a number of
ugly terms for describing those who accept pecuniary considerations
for bartering away their country's liberty. I do not mean to empLy
• -2-
any part of that vocabulary, especially at a time when her Majesty's
Government through the mouth of the Prime Minister has declared its
intention to preserve the powers of Parliament and to base its policy
in futurein Europe/upon the principle of co-operation between sovereign
independent nations. There is no room for recrimination or hard
feelings or mutual accusations when this nation is addressingitself
to reverse the errors committed in 1972 and reinforced as recently
hard-won rights and
1986 and is preparing to claw back/liberties that have been placed in
pawn already. The nation has been given the signal to stop the
retreat and start the advance. It must respond as one.
-
What is permissible and may perhaps be useful now is to re-state
the reasons why the bargain offered by the Common Market to the
British farming industry was, and was bound to be, a bad bargain.
It is an old and tested political truth that no class or
interest in a society can prosper at the expense of the rest. It is
from the wellbeing of a whole society that the wellbeing of all its
parts derives. A healthy and prosperous British agriculture is the
agriculture of a healthy and prosperous Eritain. The causes which
since the 18th century decreed that Britain would principally feed
its population by tradinc; with other continents across the sea routes
of the world were not a freak. Their permanence has not been impaired
by the development of manufacturing industry in the New World or in
Europe. They have the dignity of an enduring fIct about this desely
populated island, uniquely dependent in peace as in war upon control
and use of the sea and air around it and upon access to the oceans.
Self-sufficiency in the products of agriculture is neither strategi-
daily nor economically to its advantage: its agriculture is destined
. whateverto furnish just/conditions and convenience enable it to furnish
profitably in a nation whose ports are open to the world.
That is not a description which fits the other major member
states of the European Community. For contineetal Europe, taken as
a whole, the aspiration to agricultural self-sufficiency makes iood
-3-
c:noukh sense and corresponds strategiclly to its historical :E,mory
of recurrent blockade. When therefore the continental nations of
Western Europe decided to create a customs union, whether or not as
forerunner (like the customs union of the mid 19th century) to
political amalgamation, it was natural th y should use that
customs union to reduce dependence upon the outside world. Convenient(1
it happened that the mechanisms for doing this - no internal free
market in agricultural produce, plus a subsidy-protected tariff wail
on the exterior - would place in the hands of the Community's
administration the effective detailed control of prics and production
in all the member countries and thus an unrivalled instrument of
electoral bribery on the international as well as the national scale.
I refer to the international bribery. The United States, for
reasons best known to itself, has been keen to retain strategic
bases in Greece and in Spain, whose inhabitants are apparently morc
proud and sensitive on that subject than we British. At all events
the parti s which at present govern in Spain and Greece obtained
office by promising to remove the American bases and to stay out of
the EEC. What, you may wonder, happened? Spain kept the bases and
join d the EEC; Greece joined the EEC and kept the bases. An
irresistibly lucrative reward had been forthcoming from the Community
in terms of the Comton Agricultural Policy.• —It turns out however that British agriculture has not enjoyed
its experience of being managed by the Europeans.
The Greek proverbial figure Procrustes, you will remember, either
chopped off the extremities of his victims to Lake them f t his bed
or else he pulled their limbs out of the sockets. I find no record
tnat he ever inflicted both treatments on the same traveller; but
the Common Market has managed to do both to British agriculture: it
first cf all violently expanded it, then it viciously cut it down
again. Our friend across the Border in the play on television
found out all about that; but perhaps he never Ifrew what it really
• -4-
was that hit him. What hit him was the consequence of being governe(:
by foreigners, to fit their own needs and circumstances and purposes
and not those of his own country.
It is a good principle for any industry to bewaro of falling
into the hands of government; but if you aHe determined to be pro-
tected and prodded and managed by politicians, then, for mercy's
sake, let it be by your own politicians, wo,o you have some hope of
forcing to listen to you,and not the governments of other nations,
over whom you have no control at all. In the united Kingdom
agriculture is a permanent minority interest; but the United
Kingdom itself is a permanent minority in the European Community,
411especiallysinc we surrendered our so-called veto and handed the rest
the right to vote us down. Being a permanent minority is not so bad
when you share the same interest3and situation and intentions as
the majority. Things go very wrong when the permanent minority is
the odd man out.
This is why the barEain by which Britain was seduced in the
early 1970's was such a bad bargain. The bargain consisted of giving
up governing ourselves for the benefits of being governed by others.
British agriculture has learnt the consequences of that the hard way.
The rest of Britain and of the British electorate arc catching up on
the lesson with almest every week that passes. This being so, one
might wonder what need there is for exhortation, such as I offer to
you this evening, to align yourselves, your Union and your industry
with the Government in its proclaimed intention to defend our naticnal
self-government against erosion and destruction in the EEC.
There are two reasons, because there arc two formidable obstacles
to be overcome. The obstacles are respectively SI-iAPIE and FE:iR. In
the last seventeen years most organisations in Britain and most of
those active in public life and public positions have conformed with
the fashionof advocating and commending the removal of power and
authority from our own institutions to vest them in other institutions
-5-
which are not ours. There are MBEs, OBEs, OBEs, knighthoods and
even baronies that have been purchased at price. If errors
are to be recovered from,words have te be eaten. In any case an
example has been set by t e Government itself, most of whose members
including the Prime Minister, connived in the past - and quite a
recent past - in dismantling that national sovereignty to which it
has now made it pormissible to refer again without incurring ridicu
or disparagement.
So much for the one bogey, SHAME. A, L.—; the other bogey,
FLH , we have experience to arm us. In the early 1970's we used to
be warned that unless we gave up our self-government, we would face
the widespr ad starvation that threatened to engulf the world and
our nation's trade would shrivel. We have now lived lona enough to
see Eritish farmers being paid not to produce food - set aside"
is the euphemism: We have lived long enough to see a .114 billion
British deficit on trade in manufactures with 'destern Europe. The
people who still try to frighten us by shouting "Wolf" arc the
same who have been proved wrong when th-y shouted it Defore. The
animal is extinct in Britaih. Only the echo of the cry persists,
and the vested interests of those who have Fr2.6c; a profession out of
,jecting their fellow countrymen to tho arroant encroachment of
eigners.
4•
go.940 ofig440706424 ,2.There are certain assertions which it can suddenly become dange-
rous to dispute - dangerous socially, evn dangerous physically.
Such an assertion has in recent years been given the divsnity of
recognition by Act of Parliament. It states th-t whatever a man can
woman can also do and must therefore be enabled and encouraged
to do.
Women accordingly patrol the streets as police; women are equip-
ped with lethal weapons and trained to use them in the ranks
of vihat we now call the security forces; the obstacles which child-
birth places in the way of women functioning as men in indurtry and
commerce are as far as possible removed ot counteracted.
• The trouble about this assertion is that it is manifestly and in-
disputably untrue. +re are certain things which avuman can do that
a man cannot do, and vice versa. I will be so tactless as to spe-
cigr some of them. A woman can bear a chil_ and suckle it: a man can
not do so. A man can beget a chile: a woman cannot do so. Thribeare
physical differences between a man anf a woman, to which these re-
spective abilities and disabilities correspond and are in that sense
due.
It is customary - indeea, it verges upont Airbligatory--to
dismiss these physical cifferences and the consequent differences
of function as unimportant and irrelevant outside the narrowest
limits that can be assigned to the business of reproduction. Thisas iot
dismissal is '1/flagraniconf1ict with
the oriinal assertion is at odds with demonstrable and un oubted
fact. It amounts to maintaining that the exclusive differentiation
of reproductive funcions, a differentiation whics manlind sharss
with most o- animate creatio#, is associated aith no correspon ing
differentiation on other re-pects, as for example in mental and
emotional characteristics. It is wildly improbable that the ability
and tki func.son of b-arina. and nurturin an inlant corresponds
exclusively to physical and mechanical endo ment. .10boe.oi wcald have
al rational probability as
thought of making so absur a statement about - of all creatures -
a human being unless he was either mad or frightened; and no human
society eould have tried to orgenise itself on such a basis unless
it were in the grip of a self-destructive mania.
The non-mechanical differentiation to whilh probability, as
well as observation, points need not extend to all characterietic
ally human functions, activities and predispositions. It might, for
example, be:.-though this is not necessarily or perhaps even pro-
1)bly the cas-that the differentiation does not extend to the most
human of all characteristics, the exploitation of the powers of the
human mind, There is a huge difference between individuals of the
same sex in the manner and scale of that e_xploitation, and it would
be conceivable if the same range of difference wer identical be-
tween the two sexes, though this is to beg the question of any link
between on one hand the emotional and instinctual make-ub, and on
-the otn_er hand the intellectual make-up, of the human personeility.
/5e/74r,feiWe cannot in any case but a :nowledge s-pecielizatiom tne
teaxes is.e4ile-en two groups of functions with moee or les; far—reach-
/4.7000 /4"- wls-14A fGosiod-4- s:J^ -Vie-cc:nit:04PCin consequences. The one group of functionlas eo do with the pro-
careduction/and nurture of the new generation Icessary for the sur-
vival of the race. To these ehe group of functions foe whi-h the
male is specialized are complementary, name y, t e pro ection, sus-tA;k,t-tce4,
tenance and care of tee female/4140 facilitate and safeguard the pro-)
euction, care and nurture the new generation. These laecter
functions for which the male sex ie epecilized involve the exertion7
ysical force and cunnin7, together with the social organiea-
tion and discipline necessary to make that exertion effective: in
crude terms, according to circumstances, warfare are hunting, both
of whieh involve killing an• self-expoeure on beh lf others to
mortal danger.
I purpo ely leave unasked the question whether the
3
of beaets and Of other men, for which the male is thus :_eoecialized,
was favourable, quite al)art from its utility for the preservation
of the species, to the process of natural selection presumed to un-
derly the emergence of homo sapiens sapiens. Mkr will I en-uire if
an affirmative answer to that Question was consciously given by the
philcbsopher who in the fourth ch-bter of Ganesis made the killing
by Cain of hie Prother Abel the :irst evertin truly humeri history.**PC
I have a more practical arr: indeed/appalling question than theseto pose. It is this. To what extent, e;ithout self-destructive con-
sequences, can a human society re-organize itself in defienee
specialization and differentiation which reach eo deep into its own
past and the past of its predecessors? Is there a penalty attached
to orglinizinP: women to fight and kill and replacing them by men (so
far as physically practicable) in the production, care and early
nurtu e of children.2 It is a duestion to which the only absolutely
definitive answer is empirical - by experimenting me eeeing t
the result turns out to be. Perhaps it was to be expected that
societies which c rried out expertMents in nudear physics that maae
it possible to envisage destroying The htman race woula be easily
te-mpted to ple.y with another red knob labelled Danger of Death. That
does not rend r it less reasonable eo warn 8.:_inet indulgence in an-_ _
other experiment, of whieh the results, if they turhed out -to be ca-
lamitoustmiFht by then be irreversible.
In its present mooa of fearihj to be left behihd by contem-
porary fashion, the Church o fngland - or at least(which ie not the
same thing) the General 4noe of the Chu e:h of Ameland - has with im
peccable consistency atte-pted also to get into the popular act of
playing with the red knob. In this c -e the essertion is that, if
a man can be a priest, therefore a .omen cae be a priest too. The
word, be it notee, is priest , and not priestess. Priesteesee there
undeniably have been in human societies here and there erom hi-to-
4
rically early times, thow.h the Encyclopaedia Britannica assures
u, that "in most civilisations the male sex predominates amonz ritu-
al functionaries:, tylp female shamans and priestesses (the Vestal
Virgins at Rome,for example) are not uncommon." 'hat, we therefore
have to enquire, is the nature of the"rival function" in questiont'fr$
In Christianity there has been from 4.01.beginning a "rival
function" inseparable from Christian belief and Chrisian worship.Akew 4441, 4-
Alristian belief is that man's deepest ye&rning to '
overcome death an- counteract the individual's hauntins: conscious-
ness of human mortaj.ity is fulfillable becaue God the creator of401401-n-&trot/P*140A.
the universe becamt m-riand allowed himself to be killed by men:
to use the signifi-2cnt key term,he offere Himself as a sacrifice.
Me Christian Church nas at aol t:' rs as part of its warmest5411.-
re-enacted or re-statec toe sacr:fice o: the ceity ircarrate.A.
play the central part in that re-enactment or re-statement has Seer
the "ritual function" of a person specially appointed for the "..:Ue-
pose. It is performed by renearsin,L- certain words and acts
believed to have been spoken ard Core ty je2us; ard the oerson
specially appointed to perform that rehearsal is what the Christar
Church denotes by "priest".Ihis bear's in uwo distinut ays ueon tne
ip c 40%car do whatever men can co. In the first is a repuoi-
tion of Christian belief, ty way of aesel'efn that God couic have
achieved the redemption of mankira iv been' trw incarnate as a
woman in order to be done to de-th by other women. ',hatever else
may be saic about that assertion, at contra(iicts the essential
belief of Christianity.
c-ir is Lha_ aii. The progosition tha,t a wo7.an can performritu#j
theLfunction - car (in oer worcs: Le a priest - calls irtc
question the nature of the central rf,J.. or t-ne Church.
deliberately asec just now the altEJI-L7tive tfyrr7,s "re-eract"
"re-state"; tut a talC of meari [;:fi,arates the two terms, as it
has divided the Christian world into -t'o since the end of the
t-Addle Ages. That the rite is not mere recitation of a narrative
is evident upon the face of it. The narratve is accompanied ty
action, If it were not so accor::panied, no more would takeAny o O'ke.40-
place than takes place during the public reading of / passage
from Scripture. The endeavour to probe the meaninp: of what the
Church is doing, and always has teen doinF, confronts the seeker
with ar appalling dilemma, which individuals have found themselves
compelled by disposition or by their intellectual environment to-
resolve by seizing upon one horn of the dilemma cr the other:
either nothing, happens, or somethin hacpens. That is the alter-
nmative which has divided Christenc]o:: and still divides it; for
if something happens, it happens because a certain sort or person
ina certain way and in certain circuista„nces re-enacts what Coo
incarnate said and cid.
Those who peer from the outside at the ai-;ony into which the
Church cf EnFland has been thrust by the pressure ur:on it - T
resort to a Pauline expression - to be "conformed tc this world"
are in the habit of superficially misuncerstandinF the cause of
that agony. The Church of England, they imaii,ine, is afraid that
by oruainihe women as Frtest-s—ft wouid mu, an end to aii 00553i-
tility of union - or reunion - with the iiomar Church. This is a
shallow misapprehension. The aurch of ErFlard is by definition
that church of which, the sureme :;.overnment on earth is v,--sted in
the soverein. There may be those who mouic like to substitute
for that authcrity the authority of the doman pontiff, as there
are also those in tne secular sphere whc' to replace the
authority of the Crown in Parliament by some other authoity
external to the realm. It is not however the possibility of th=-,t
substitution, which woulo ipso facto terminate tne existence of
the Church of E 'land, that is the point at issue for it in the
ordination of women iniests.
•
• 6
The real issue turns upon another characteristic of the
Church of iinEland, a characteristic eract:ed and maintained under
that same authority. The Church of Enland is a church neither
catholic nor protestant, or rather, both catholic arc protestant.
it solemnly and by law refuses to resolve the dilemma by which
toe worlo outside is divided. Thanks to this refusal, it has
been, as it continues today, the national church of all the
En:Jlish. If the Church of Enland ceclared that the ritual
function at the heart of its worship could te performec in-
differently by a mar or a woman, it ,,:ould have rarF,ec itself,
once for all, behind one uroerstarcirt of thait central act and
a,-,.ainst the other understartir. Its nature would there-cy have
been u.,te r iy char:fed.
et the outoog.e of that chanEe coda ce, no mar can foretell.
For the Church of 't]rh:i.lanc, arz for hur society, t'rih is one cf
those experiments of which the resuts, a toe tjme thr Cecr
known, are irreversiole.
NOT FOR PUBLICATION OE REFEEELCL10 cOINT nLi'ORL IIiiR OL1V.E,E
Address by the Rt hon. J. Enoch Powell, -111-3E, to theCambridge University Conservative Association, at theUniversity Arms, Cambridge, at 1 p.m. 14ednesday,
22nd February 1989.
I have in the past made use of the privilege of addressing
this Association to draw attention to a recent proclivity on the
part of Parliament to be hustled by panic or public clamour into
legislation destructive of rights of the individual lone establishec
under the law of England. This proclivity has continued to manifest
itself, and I return to it today.
Among the long-established rights to which I refer - I am^
careful not to describe them as "human rights", because I cannot
understand how rights can be derived from the mere fact of belonging
to the species homo sapiens sapiens - are two which at this moment
arc in process of being destroyed or diminished. One is the right
of free movement from one place in the realm to another. The
second is the right of free exit from the realm. It is significant
and ironical that Britain has recently been engaged along with other
nations in the attempt to coerce the Soviet Union into enacting
these very rights by abolishing the practices of internal exile
and of restricted or prohibited exit which have lonE been charac-
teristic of the Russian state for causes which, like other such
characteristics, are historically explicable but - between you and
"none of our business".
The curtailment of a riEht is commonly initiated tentatively
and then broadened out thereafter. In 1(375, in the panic hysteria
which followed the so-call d "Birmingham bombing'', the then Labour
Government carried on to the statute book of the United Kingdom a
system of internal exile whereby individuals could be prohibited
from moving from one part of the kingdom to another, namely, from
i“:)rthern Ireland to Great Britain or vice versa. This was accepted
at the time - though I helped to modify it to the extent that the
power was made two-directional instead of unidirectional as
-
originally proposed - for two reasons. One I have mentionedto
already. Thiswas public alarm and dismay, a motivation/which it
is the duty of a legislature to remain as far as humanly possible
impervious. The other cause was a tendency particularly common
and particularly damaging in a parliamentary democracy, na
the tendency to say, "It's all right. It won't apply Co mc. It
will only apply to those other perishers". If the "other perisher'
happens to be someone whom you don't like or of whom you have
heard ill report, this 'I'm-all-right-Jack' factor is a powerful
lubricant of bad legislation.• So we have accepted internal exile in the United Kingdom for
some fourteen years on the excuse that 'it only applies to
Northern Ire-land". In fact, Parliament has just been renewing it
again.
however we arc now engaged in reaping from the same field
anoth r crop of rights diminished and riEhts withdrawn. We are
doing so in the context of what is called 'soccer hcoliganism'.
this point, for the avoidance of misunderstanding or cavil,
I must observe that of course the right of free internal movement
within the realm and of free exit from it h.s never applied,
and never could have applied, to.persons arrestable on a criminal
charge or persons who, having been duly found guilty and sentenced,
have been judicially deprived of their liberty. Perhaps the caveat
is particularly relevant to the underhand manner in which the ni.wa
withdrawal of/long-established individual right is being compassed,
namely, by extending the scope of judicial discretion.
Under the Football Supporters Bill the courts will oc able to
restriction orders with the object of preventing convicted del.ln-
quents from travelling abroad. They would have to report to police
statiohsor attendance centres when a national team or an English
club was playing abroad. These restriction orders, designed toat will
prevent people from going abroad4 would last for two years where a
-3-
penalty less than a prison sentence had been imposed and for five
years in other cases. So here it is. An offence against the law
of England is to attract the withdrawal of freedom to leave the
country. Oh yes, but in a period and in circumstances when thesimilar
former offender mignt commit a /offence cn foreign soil. On the
same logic, a person convicted and punished for exceeding cur speed
iimitswould presumably be prevented from going on holiday to France
where he might hire a car and drive it above the speeds locally
permitted.
There are wide-ranging and sinister overtones here, which it
-is worth identifying. This curtailment of the citizen's right to
• leave the realm at will is intended, in the Government's words,
"to reduce the harm done to Britain's image abroad by its football
hooligans". That takes us into a very big league indeed. It is
an assertion that the courts of England ought to be given power, by
impeding an individual's exit,to prevent, or to diminish the risk
of, the commission of an offence in another jurisdiction. The con-
cept of national jurisdictions has become seriously blurred of late -
and notably, in the atmosphere of panic over what is called terrorism.
I understand why the French authorities should assist the apprehen-
sion, trial and conviction in EnEland of a person who has committed
a serious crime he7-e; but the proposition that having committed
an .offence in England a person should be denied by law his riEht to
leave the realm on the ground that he might break the law obtaining
elsewhere, is the thin end of a potentially very thick wedge.
We are, it seems to me, in danger of losing siEht of two great
principles. One os that our rights and liberties are linked with
telritorial jurisdiction: they are rights anc: liberties exercised
and enforceable within a particular jurisdiction and depend there-
fore on how that jurisdiction is delimited. The attempt to escape
from the delimitation of territoriality brings with it not an en-
largement but a curtailment of individual rights and liberties.
The second principle is that rights and liberties are endangered
•
whenever the punishment of offences is enlarged by the use of judielo
order to include restrictions on the exercise of riEhts and liber-
ties. In the direction in which we are heading, we could end by
givinE the courts discretionary power not merely to impose internal
exile but to withdraw the individual's freedom to leave the country.
The dangerous trends to which I have drawn attention have not
been the result of any profound and settled public sense in favour
of the curtailment of rights and liberties. The question of princib:
has remained out of sight, and been kept out of sight. Indeed, the
public might be surprised to learn that internal oxile and confine-
ment to the realm have now become part of the laws of England. This
was the result of haphazard and ad hoc use of legislation by way of
reacting to events that gave cause for alarm or indignation. We
have become used to shoot-from-the-hip legislation. We do it all
the time. An ugly incident occurs on a football ground here or
elsewhere. Tne Prime Minister comes out with a loudly applauded
expression of abhorrence. The next thing we know is that, hey
presto, there is to be a new crime created or a new punishment
invented. This is happening continually. I personally enjoy no
more than the next man the idea of people selling their organs,
their tissues or their blood. What I like even loss is to hear
that - off the cuff, so to speak, with a fair wind from the Opposition
and from all concerned - there is to be a Bill pushed through
• Parliament at top speed to create a new crime or a whole hew range
of crimes, without adequate opportunity for maturer opinion to
crystallize or for the wider and (dare I use the word?) philosophical
implications to be explored and understood. This is nc manner and
no moi'Ddin whic, to stick bits onto the edifice of the criminal law
of England. It is this atmosphere of near-hysteria in which with
general applause Parliament gets to trample upon the rights and
fr edoms which it nas nurtured and protected through its long history.
There is no bettor place at which to utter this croak of
warning and alarm than a university, that is to say, a place whore
people have time to think and to stEnd back from events. iviay I ace,
no better university for the job than Cambridge?
•
NOT FOR PUBLICTION OE REFERENCETO CONTENT BEFORE TME OF DELIVERY
Speech by the Rt Hon. J. Enoch Powell iVEE to theAnnual Dinner of the Sheldon (Birmingham) Branchof the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers Association atthe Sheldon TA Centre, 6 p.m. Saturday 8 February
1969.
The City of Birmingham is a suitable place, and the Fifth
Battalion of the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers is a suitable audience,
for sounding a strategic tocsin. The immediate occasion for alarm
is the Government's announcement that British contractors for
supplying armaments to our armed forces must in future share the
-work with what are called "European firms", meaning factories situaLee.
on the mainland of the European continent.
I ask one question, to which I believe there is no doubt about
the answer. What would have been the fate of Britain in 1940 if
production of the Hurricanaand the Spitfire had been dependent upon
the output of factories in France: That a question so glaringly
ouvious does not get asked in public or in governmer:-. illuminates
the danger created for this nation by the rolling stream of time
which bears away the generation of 1940, the generation, that is to
say, of those who experienced as adults Britain s great peril and
Britain's great deliverance. Talk at Bruges or Luxembourg about
not surrendering our national sovereignty is all very well. They
mean icss than nothing when the keys to our national defence are
being handed over: an island nation which no lonser commands the
essential means of oefendinF itself by air and sea is a nation no
longer sovereign.
That this surrender can take place under our noses with no
public protest and even no public awareness is the consequence of
a '-'and strategic delusion into which Britain has allowed itself
to be lulled for forty years. The nature of that delusion is
Armageddon. We have learnt to believe in a thunderclap war, where
our own future as well as that of our allies will be settled by one
almighty battle on the Plain of Esdraclon. Whatever may be true
fbr others, that delusion is absolutely fatal for the United Kindom.
The safety of this island nation reposes upon two pillars. The
first is the impregnability of its homeland to invasion by air or
sea. The second is its ability and its will to create over time the
military forces by which the last conclusive battle will be decided.
Uithout cur own industrial base of military armament production
neither cf those pillars will stand. No doubt, with the oceans kept
open, we can look to buy or borrow from the other continents; but
to depend on the continent of Europe for our arms is suicide.
The Armageddon delusion has recently moved into a new phase.
. .
In the old days, when people believed in the American nuclear deter-
rent attached to a tripwire down the middle of Europe, the biE bang
of Armageddon was the nuclear holocaust. Wow that America and Russia
have both admitted Dy deeds more eloquent than words that they believe
in this no longer, a new battle of Armageddon is being invented to
replace the old one. The new Armageddon will not be so new after all:
it bears a remarkable family resemblance to 1914, the Schlieffen Plan
and the Eattle of Tannenberg and all that. It is called "conventional'
and everybody now is talking about "conventional balance west of
the Urals". Our imbellic ministers, who wouldn't know Hindenburg
from Samsonov if they met them, are tickl d pink with "balance of non-
nuclear weapons' ann spend their tim:= totting up lists of tanks and
field guns and personnel carriers.
Surprise, surprise: the Russians have larF, numbers of them,
and being a huge continental country, which has to look south and
east as well as west, they keep quitc a lot of them in European
ELssia. The silliness is to imagine that the present size and location
of tncse respectivE arithmetical totals is what d cidcs the destiny
of Europe and encourages or discourages the Soviet Union in the crazy
and mythical project of invading and conquering Western Europe,
including the British Isles.
The ghost of von Loltke and the afterglow of the Franco-Prussian
War could still lure Germany in 1914 to go for Armageddon; but
-2-
Armageddon got its come-uppance, first, in the trench warfare of
S14-1918, and then, in 940, in the failure of Sealion and the
futile throw to out-Napoloen Napoleon in hussia. The hbalancen is
there already, not waiting to be constructed like a house of cards
at Vienna or Geneva. It is a balance in which one unconfessed but
potent element is British: the impregnability of the British Isles
and the capability of the British nation for military mobilisation.
There is however a condition precedent for that impregnability
and that mobilisation. It is that Britain retains within itself,
unshared with the European continent, the industrial capability for
producing the material equipment indispensable for its defence, and
producing it in the order and at the length of notice at which it is
likely to be required. What a cruel and foolish irony, that, in the
name of our commitment to European peace guaranteed by the balance
of power, we should contemplate deliberately divesting ourselves of
the one essential contribution that Britain has to make - not to
mention the ultimate capability of self-defence, without which
liberty and national sovereinty are empty words.
hy comrades in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment will understand
that if I speak tonight about the material component of British
defence, I do so because it is the threat to Europeanise that
component which caunes most immediate alarm. Of course there is
the human component, which, as Napoleon remarked of the moral and the
physical, stands to the material factor in the ratio of three to one.
The immense expansion which the Royal Warwickshire Regiment underwent
in two world wars is part of the proof that britain has the power,
wa,A3which Continental nations do not reed to understand, to become
in time of need a nation under arms. Of that transformation the line
infantry is and will remain the heart and core. The proof of Britain s
continued wiii and ability to perform that transformation and perform
it as and when called for lies in the peacetime Army and in the
voluntary peacetime Army. The British Army, no longer a colonial
garrison army, is essentially a cadre army, the peacetime germ of an
army at war. Eveh of this the myth of Armageddon had threatehed to•
deprive us, by representing the voluntary peacetime Army as a mere
component of regular forces due to be sacrificed to holoch on the
Plain of Esdraelon. That is false, false to reality, and false to
Britain's destiny. Those who serve in peace serve to make possible,
and tc declare possible, the creation of a future British Army com-
parable with those which defeated the last three bids to erect on
military power the mastery of Europe. They arc as integral to
Britain's liberty as is a British fleet in being and a British
armaments industry. Let no passing fashion In intnational politics
deprive us of that defence.
•
• NOT FOR PUELICATIOI,J OR REFERENCE
• TO CONTENT BEFORE TIME OF DELIVERY
Speech by the Rt Hon. J. Enoch Powell, MBE, to theAnnual General Meeting of the Central Committee of theSouth Down Unionist Association at Dromore OranEe Hall,Co. Down, at 8 p.m., Friday, 20th January, 1989.
It is commonplace among commentators to claim that the
ingredient most necessary in Northern Ireland is reconciliation.
The word reconciliation trips effortlessly off the pens of journa-
lists and the tongues of clergy. It is an inexpensive and usually
thoughtless cliche. Ironically, however, those who make this claim
have got hold of the correct analysis. Where they are wrong is in
the local application of it.
Without reconciliation there is no exit from the nightmare
which the Anglo-Irish Agreement of 1985 entailed upon this province.
The reconciliation that is needed, however, is not reconciliation
within the province itself, not reconciliation between two incom-
patible and mutually contradictory objectives, not reconciliation
betwten living in one state anti ig in another state. That
reconciliation, essentially bogus, iS ohly to be had at the Oniee
;iof insecUnity and deibtt, of" a pnetende which recoils upoh the heads
of those who contriiie it and deludes and cheats their fellow citizens.
The reconciliation Wnieh Ulster's peace awaita iS nOt the false
reconciliation of pretending to compromise or combine opposites,
not reconciliation between those elected to aim at irreconcilable ana
411incompatible goals. It is a different reconciliation altogether; and
those upon it rests to achieve it are those most often heard demanding
it from others. The reconciliation for lack cf which men, women and
children in Ulster suffer and perish is reconciliation between the
United Kingdom and the Irish Republic. Those are the guilty parties,
whose failure to practise what they preach created and maintains the
reiEn of fear and terrorism in this province. Of their failure to
be reconciled, or even to grasp what reconciliation between them means,
the Anglo-Irish Agreement itself is the ghastly monument and proof.
-2-
They ought to resolve now, in the iJew Year, to repent of thei
past pride and follies and put right what they have done wrong.
Britain has never yet been willing to accept that the Irish
Republic is a fully free and independent nation, determined beyond
all else upon maintaining two things repugnant to Br tish conceit an,
British policy - its neutrality, and its determination to be in no
way subject or subordinate to the United Kingdom. Britain has neve):
yet become reconciled to this. Onthe contrary, since the Free State
was conceived seventy years ago,Britain has invested all its cunnin
and persistence and all its unscrupulousness in the futile project
• of achieving an Irish state - "dominion" was the old-fashioned ord -
which will be inside, if not the same Commonwealth, at least the
same Alliance as Britain. To this inherently unattainable purpose
countless human lives in both islands have been cynically sacrificed:
no folly or deceit, however preposterous, has been left untried.
It was in pursuance of this misconception that in 1920 there
was forced upon Northern Ireland an anomalous constitution designed
to pave the way to a unitary Irish dominion, which placed the politi-
cal minority in Ulster in a position of permanent disadvantage from
wt.th no other minority in the UK suffers. In pursuance of the same
misconception, that constitution was destroyed again in 1972, inclear the
order to / grouna fOr a series of constitutional contraptions, all
unworkable and all intended to lead to a federal all-Ireland state
and thus, so it was fancied, purchase the compliance of the Irish
Republic with British aims. Finally, the Anglo-Irish Agreement
gave to the Irish Republic a share in the governance of Northern
Ireland on the pretext that the Republic would assist Britain to
de feat the IRA , a thing no Irish government dare be seen to do.
This was cheating. It placed the Irish government in the im
sible position of sharing responsibility for the administration and
defence of Northern Ireland, while at the same time it held out hope
and encouragement to terrorism and placed a premium upon alienation
-3-
within the province. When this fraud collapsed, as all frauds
eventually do, the British government lost its temper and attempted
to cover its embarrassment by abusing the Irish Republic.
The Irish Republic has however had its 07,,n iatal misconcep-
tion. There is sOmething about the Unitee Kingdom which the
Irish Republic has equally obdurately refused for the last seventy
years to recognize. This is that, whatever the Irish constitution
and Irish mythology allege, there is a large and genuine majority
in the north-east of the island of Ireland which opts, always has
opted and will always go on opting, to be part of the parliamentary
' union of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and that the United
Kingdom, as a parliamentary state, can do no other than acknowledge
that option, despite all the wheezes and insincerites which its
unavowed motives entail.
The consequence is that the Irish Republic has got itself into
just the same false position,as Britain, by greedily accepting from
Britain the poisohed bait of an acknowledged partnership in the
government of Northern Ireland, The trap which has closed upon it
is the trap of responSibility without power. The Republic is seer,
and justifiably seen, as jointly responsible far everything in
Northern Ireland. Whenever Tom King lifts Up hi8 voide to rant
about the co-operation he is receiving from the Republic, Charles
Haughey enjoys the same agreeable sensation as that of a dentist's
411drill applied without anaesthetic to the root of a tooth. Haughey
is paying for the folly and greed of his predecessor FitzGeralts,
who thought that he could grab something for nothing from the Brits
and build a political monument for himself upon the hollow foundation
of ilillsborough.
The truth of the matter is that while the Republic, as an
independent state, has no rights and no duties in Northern Ireland,
it a deep and abiding interest in the status of Northern Ireland
and the wellbeing of all its people being no longer or the political
-4-
agenda, tied like a tin can to the tail of every politician and eveiv
political party in the Republic. To secure stability and legitimacy
for Northern Ireland is as much an interest of the Irish Republic as
it is a duty and responsibility of the United Kinw:dom.
There is something else too which Charles Haughey and his
government now understand much more clearly perhaps than Mrs Thatcher
understands it. Stability and legitimacy for Northern Ireland are
not available through fudges and artificial constitutional expedient
that collapse no sooner than they are erected and serve only to keep
the cauldron of uncertainty and suspicion on the boil. Stability and
'legitimacy for Northern Ireland will be available only when all its
people are admitted equally and without cvualification to the same
rights, the same laws, the same political opportunities and the same
forubof government as the people of every other part of the United
Kingdom possess.
Reconciliation there has to be - but reconciliation between
Britain and the Republic, acknowledging each other at last for what
they really are and banishing the delusion that each can steal a
march upon the other by hypocrisy. Everybody now knows, though not
everybody officially admits, that the Anglo-Irish Agreement was a
disaster, from which both parties to it have got to extricate them-
.-selVeS. Let them d; that With-a real IL_nglo-irish -agreement,
each acknowledges the full separateness and independence of the other
as sovereign states in international law. Then, if they like, they
can start to erect a mechanism for talking to one another about the
realities of that outside world in which they both have to live.
I want to believe that the Prime Minister has the wisdom to
understand this, and the magnanimity to act upon it. If she does so,
she may find, as the magnanimous often do, that the other side will
come to meet her more than half way.
•
Address by the Rt Hon. J. Enoch Powell,MBE, to theOld Bill Symposium (Holt's Battlefield Tours),Warwick Hilton Hotel, Warwick, at 9 p.m., Friday,
13th January 1989.
We gaze with wonderment and awe from a distance of seventy years
and across another World War upon the huge expansion of the British
Army which took place between 1914 and 1918; and we stand with
amazement before the cheerfulness and sense of duty with which that
expansion was accomplished and continued up to the very moment of the
Armistice.
"Lest we forget" - the prayer of the Recessional - comes to our
110lips; for indeed in the forty years since the last war ended we
have been in danger not merely of forgetting but of mocking the memory
of how twice the people of Britain were transformed into a nation in
arms. The Royal Warwickshire Regiment and its inseparable creation,
Old Bill, are a fitting context in which to recall that transformation.
With all possible respect for the other arms and corps, it is by the
infantry that the nation in arms is symbolized; and it is the peace-
time infantry regiment which expresses the will, the intention, and
the capability of placing, if need be, a mighty British wartime army
in the field of battle again.
The time too is propitious for remembrance. In recent month; at
an accelerating speed, notions about the defence of Britain and the
balance of power in Europe that have mesmerized public and politicians
alike since the 1940's have been abandoned. We have lived our way out
from under the mandatory belief in a conflict which, if it occurred at
all, would be terminated in a matter of days by the inconceivable
nuclear duel of two super_powers. We have begun to understand again
that the true balance of fear which restrains aggression is the prospect
not of nuclear annihilation but of eventual military catastrophe.
If Russia ever harboured the ambition to conquer Western Europe
and these islands - I doubt whether in fact she feVe'n did, but that is
another debate - she knew that she had to face the prospect of a
• -2-
Third World War, in which she could not be a winner even if she were
a survivor.
The maintenance of peace in Europe and the prospect in Central
Europe of a new pattern of free nations emerging has ceased to be a
branch of demonolgy and become a matter for rational calculation. In
that new Europe, appearing as the Ice Age of the Cold War retreats,
the responsibilities of the United Kingdom are only less, if less at
all, than those of Russia; for in the European balance of power
Britain is a decisive factor.
It is important to understand why. The reason is not because— .
Britain maintains, as Russia maintains, vast standing armed forcesrt,
on sea, in the air, or above all on land. Europe is not under the
misapprehension that we defeated Germany in 1940 by the ability to
mobilize and to deploy massive land formations. What proved invincible
then was our insular position, combined with the prowess of the Royal
Air Force and the existence of the Royal Navy as a "fleet in being".
It was that combination which turned the Germany armies eastward tor-,_,
their doom at the hands of the Russian _scat:ilia:Lent, the Russian climate
and the Russian people. Europe however knows something else about us.
It knows that at the climax of all—the European war7 in which for
three hundred years we nave taken part, a British field army, matching
those of its continental neighbours in size and in competence, has taYen -
0 a decisive part.
Those then are the two proven characteristics of Britain which
give us our joint responsibility along with Russia for the peace of
Europe - which is the same thing as to say, for the European balance
of power. The first characteristic is our impregnability, an impreg-
nability founded in our insularity but guaranteed by the unrelaxed
readiness of our maritime and air forces. The second characteristic-
is our ability and our willingness to become again as we have become
in the past, a nation in arms. We did it before: we would do it again.
-3-
That is the conviction which makes Britain a great power.
That is the conviction which gives to the Army an equal claim with
the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force upon the support and the
affection of the nation. To all our remembering, all our commemoration,
all our evocation of what the Army was and did in past wars and,
beyond all the rest, in 1914-1918, it is this which gives purpose and
dignity, raising it above the level of mere pastime and curiosity.
To the professional, career Army, it gives the logical justification
for its training, its organization, and its way of life.
I am far from believing that the application of this logic
has been anywhere near exhausted. The Army, more than the other
IIIservices, has barely emerged from a long, depressing nuclear winter,in which its political masters were in no position to offer inspiration
or rational objectives. In particular, nobody could claim that the
relationship between the Army and the civil population has been thought
through afresh in modern terms. The Imperial assumptions of the
19th century still weigh heavy ano recognizable upon the Army of
Cardwell, Roberts and Kitchener.
The relationship between the Army and the civil population,
between the Army in peace and thet-nation in arms which is the Army's
destiny - that, after all, is what, in humorous form, Old Bill was
about. I will put him into his place in what should be the Army's
4110watchword: rOld Bill did it before; Old Bill would do it again".